“I’ve been in the hospital several times. I’ve had a lot of things going on. I recently found a lawyer who would be able to help me with the landlord-tenant case, and he needs me to help him,” Louis Segna, 53, said, referring to his dispute with a coffee-shop tenant.

Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice William Harrington said he appreciated Segna’s difficulties, but explained his decision to punish the lifelong bachelor with jail time by saying, “He acted recklessly. This was a severe case given the nature of the calls, but thankfully nobody was hurt.”

Segna’s lawyer said his client has mental issues.

“When the judge put him in jail he deteriorated drastically. His best mental state is not going to be [at] Rikers,” said attorney William Fowlkes.

Cops say Segna made more than 400 calls complaining about noise, violence that nobody else could corroborate and even an explosion at the subway station under his apartment.